Development and evaluation of a spaced eLearning intervention for nurses in enhancing urinary catheter management - A co-design study in partnership with research end-users
Joby Alex , Caleb Ferguson , Lucie M. Ramjan , Michelle Louise Fishburn , Jed Montayre , Yenna Salamonson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Nurses play a critical role in supporting patients in self-managing their indwelling urinary catheters and preventing avoidable hospital presentations. This study aimed to explore the effectiveness of a co-designed educational approach developed to enhance nurses' ability to provide optimal care for patients with catheters.
Aim
The primary aim of this study was to enhance nurses' knowledge and skills in urinary catheterisation, care, and management. The secondary aim was to transform their current catheter management practices to improve patient outcomes.
Setting
Nurses (n = 127) from one New South Wales, Australia region participated in the study. These nurses provided healthcare across various community settings. Ethics approval was received from the Local Health District (HREC/2019/ETH12575) and the study was registered in ANZCTR (ACTRN12621000683831).
Methods
A mixed-methods approach was used, collecting data at baseline and after the intervention. Quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics, tests for normality, and bivariate analysis with the Wilcoxon Signed Ranks test to identify differences between variables. Qualitative data were analysed using a directed content analysis approach to categorise occurrences of specific phenomena.
Results
The composite mean knowledge score increased from 65.03 to 84.30 following the intervention (p < 0.001). In addition, the magnitude of knowledge score improvement in seven out of eight questions following the intervention were: Financial support: 1.1 %; Bladder spasm/urine leakage: 3.3 %; Blockage: 3.5 %; Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection (CAUTI): 4.4 %; Self-management: 6.1 %; Sexuality: 7.9 %; and Urinary catheterisation: 11.3 %. Qualitative findings confirmed that the eLearning module was effective in transforming participants' clinical practice, towards improving patient outcomes.
Conclusions
The co-designed eLearning module effectively addressed the learning needs of nurses, enhancing their knowledge and skills in urinary catheter management. Incorporating a theoretical model and contextual approach in the intervention delivery increased relevance, personalisation, and engagement, facilitating the behaviour change required to transform current practices.
期刊介绍:
Nurse Education Today is the leading international journal providing a forum for the publication of high quality original research, review and debate in the discussion of nursing, midwifery and interprofessional health care education, publishing papers which contribute to the advancement of educational theory and pedagogy that support the evidence-based practice for educationalists worldwide. The journal stimulates and values critical scholarly debate on issues that have strategic relevance for leaders of health care education.
The journal publishes the highest quality scholarly contributions reflecting the diversity of people, health and education systems worldwide, by publishing research that employs rigorous methodology as well as by publishing papers that highlight the theoretical underpinnings of education and systems globally. The journal will publish papers that show depth, rigour, originality and high standards of presentation, in particular, work that is original, analytical and constructively critical of both previous work and current initiatives.
Authors are invited to submit original research, systematic and scholarly reviews, and critical papers which will stimulate debate on research, policy, theory or philosophy of nursing and related health care education, and which will meet and develop the journal''s high academic and ethical standards.